Jane Doe v. Rice County

  • Filed: 12/20/2017
  • Status: Won
  • Court: Rice County District Court
  • Latest Update: Dec 20, 2017
Placeholder image

This case argues against the criminalization of teenagers who send explicit images of themselves under Minnesota's child pornography statute.

Case Update

Victory! On February 20, 2018, Judge John Cajacob dismissed changes against Jane Doe.

Case Background

The American Civil Liberties Union of Minnesota filed a brief in Jane Doe v. Rice County. Rice County charged 14-year-old Jane Doe with distribution of child pornography after she distributed an image of herself using the mobile messaging application, Snapchat. If found guilty, Jane Doe could face up to 10 years on the sex offender registry. The ACLU-MN argues in its brief that the Minnesota child pornography statute is intended to protect victims of child sexual exploitation. Interpreting the child pornography statute to punish teenagers who send images of themselves violates free-speech rights under the First Amendment, raises vagueness concerns under the Fourteenth Amendment, and jeopardizes thousands of minors across the state by criminalizing increasingly common adolescent behavior.

The ACLU-MN is asking the Court to dismiss the charges against Jane Doe.

ATTORNEY(S)

ACLU-MN’s amicus curiae brief was written by: Lousene Hoppe, Fredrikson & Byron, P.A. and Teresa Nelson, ACLU of Minnesota.

 

Minnesota Prosecutor Charges Sexting Teenage Girl With Child Pornography

A 14-year-old Minnesota girl is fighting criminal charges that have the potential to destroy her future, including her ability to obtain housing, to enroll in college programs, and even to pursue some career paths. Her case does not involve harm to others. It does not involve damage to property. And it does not have anything to do with illegal substances.

By Teresa Nelson

Texting

A Teenager Sending a Selfie Isn’t a Crime. But Rice County is Charging a Teenager For Doing Just That.

A teenager in Southern Minnesota could face up to 10 years on the sex offender registry—all because she sent an explicit selfie. 

By Aliya Khan

pexels-photo-359757

Related News & Podcasts

News & Commentary
Jan 05, 2018
Texting
  • Student & Youth Rights

Minnesota Prosecutor Charges Sexting Teenage Girl With Child Pornography

A 14-year-old Minnesota girl is fighting criminal charges that have the potential to destroy her future, including her ability to obtain housing, to enroll in college programs, and even to pursue some career paths. Her case does not involve harm to others. It does not involve damage to property. And it does not have anything to do with illegal substances.
News & Commentary
Dec 21, 2017
pexels-photo-359757
  • Privacy & Technology|
  • +1 Issue

A Teenager Sending a Selfie Isn’t a Crime. But Rice County is Charging a Teenager For Doing Just That.

A teenager in Southern Minnesota could face up to 10 years on the sex offender registry—all because she sent an explicit selfie.